The present bibliography is devoted to works containing research carried out within the theoretical parameters of the Columbia School of Linguistics (Diver 1995). Its aim is to provide readers with guidance regarding this line of linguistics research. Papers and chapters

In a number of cases, scholars engaged in Columbia School research also have publications that fit better under other theoretical orientations. Some (but not all) of those publications are also listed here, the result being that some of the entries in this bibliography are not strictly speaking Columbia School work, but work by scholars well informed on the Columbia School approach. The present bibliography does not include all of William Diver's early papers, limiting itself to the Columbia School phase of his career (for a full bibliography of Diver's work, see Huffman & Davis 2012). The bibliography includes work by scholars whose main interest is in other areas but who have written informed commentary about Columbia School analysis (see, for example, Butler & Gonzálvez-García 2014, Langacker 2004). This is a work in progress. The editor welcomes suggestions for improvement.

Abbreviation:CUWPL = Columbia University Working Papers in Linguistics

Davis, Joseph. 2004b. The Linguistics of William Diver and the Linguistics of Ferdinand de Saussure. History of Linguistics in Texts and Concepts, Vol. I, ed. by G. Hassler & G. Volkmann. Münster: Nodus, pp. 307–326.

Diver, William and Joseph Davis. 2012. The phonology of the extremes or, what is a problem? Language: Communication and human behavior: The linguistic essays of William Diver, ed. by Alan Huffman & Joseph Davis. Leiden/Boston: Brill, pp. 323–341.

Diver, William. 1986a. The history of linguistics in the West: How the study of language went wrong in the western tradition. Transcribed and edited by Takashi Aoyama. Helicon 11.43–68. Nara City, Japan: Tezukayama College English Department. Revised and reprinted in Language: Communication and human behavior: The linguistic essays of William Diver, ed. by Alan Huffman & Joseph Davis. 2012. Leiden/Boston: Brill, pp. 523–542.

Dreer, Igor. 2007. Expressing the same by the different: The subjunctive vs. the indicative in French. Amsterdam/Philadelphia: John Benjamins.

Dreer, Igor. 2011. The distribution of linguistic forms and textual structure: Two sign-oriented approaches to the textual analysis of the use of the French Indicative and Subjunctive. Linguistic theory and empirical evidence, ed. by Bob de Jonge & Yishai Tobin. Amsterdam/Philadelphia: John Benjamins, pp. 17–44.

Green, Hila. 2010. The contour of prosodic intonation in spoken language of children with high functioning autism according to the Theory of Phonology as Human Behavior. Ph.D. dissertation. Ben-Gurion University of the Negev.

Halpern, Orly and Yishai Tobin. 2011. Phonology as human behavior: ‘Non-Vocalization’ – A phonological error process in the speech of severely and profoundly hearing impaired adults – from the point of view of the theory of phonology as human behavior. Linguistic theory and empirical evidence, ed. by Bob de Jonge & Yishai Tobin. Amsterdam/Philadelphia: John Benjamins, pp. 219–243.

Hameed, Shabana. 2004. Interaction of physiology and communication in the make-up and distribution of stops in Lucknow Urdu. Cognitive and communicative approaches to linguistic analysis, ed. by Ellen Contini-Morava, Robert S. Kirsner, & Betsy Rodríguez-Bachiller. Amsterdam/Philadelphia: John Benjamins, pp. 277–288.

Kirsner, Robert S. 1983b. On the use of quantitative discourse data to determine inferential mechanisms in grammar. Discourse perspectives on syntax, ed. by F. Klein-Andreu. New York: Academic Press, pp. 237–257.

Kirsner, Robert S. 1985b. Quantitative approaches to Dutch linguistic structure. Papers from the first interdisciplinary conference on Netherlandic studies, University of Maryland, College Park, June 1982, ed. by W. H. Fletcher. University Press of America, pp. 95–104.

Kirsner, Robert S. 1986b. On being empirical with indirect objects: The subtleties of aan. Dutch linguistics at Berkeley: papers presented at the Dutch linguistics colloquium held at the University of California, Berkeley on November 9th, 1985, ed. by J. Snapper & J. van Oosten. Berkeley: Dutch Studies Program, University of California, pp. 27–43.

Kirsner, Robert S. 1987. What it takes to show whether an analysis "fits". Descriptio linguistica: Proceedings of the first conference on descriptive and structural linguistics. Antwerp. 9-10 September 1985, ed. by H. Bluhme & G. Hammarstrom. Tübingen: Gunther Narr, pp. 76–113.

Kirsner, Robert S. 1988. Prepositional versus "bare" indirect objects in the written Dutch of novels and newspapers. Papers from the third interdisciplinary conference on Netherlandic studies, Ann Arbor, June 1986, ed. by In T. Broos et al. Lanham, MD: University Press of America, pp. 279–296.

Kirsner, Robert S. 1989. Does sign-oriented linguistics have a future? On the falsifiability of theoretical constructs. From sign to text: A semiotic view of communication, ed. by Y. Tobin. Amsterdam/Philadelphia: John Benjamins, pp. 161–178.

Kirsner, Robert S. 1995. Review of Duration in English: A basic choice illustrated in comparison with Dutch, by Lia Korrel. Berlin and New York: Mouton de Gruyter. 1991. Studies in Language 19, 244–248.

Kirsner, Robert S. 2003a. Linguistics as politics: On the role of alternative approaches within Dutch linguistics. History in Dutch studies, ed. by R. Howell & J. Vanderwal Taylor. Lanham / New York / London: University Press of America, pp. 125–139.

Kirsner, Robert S. 2003b. On the interaction of the Dutch pragmatic particles hoor and hè with the imperative and infinitivus pro imperativo. Usage-based studies of Dutch, ed. by A.Verhagen & J. M. van de Weijer. Utrecht: LOT, pp. 59–96.

Kirsner, Robert S. 2004b. Linguistic phenomena in the works of Marga Minco and Gerard Reve. Janus at the millennium: Perspectives on time in the culture of the Netherlands, ed. by T. F. Shannon & J. P. Snapper. Lanham/New York/London: University Press of America, pp. 179–192Kirsner, Robert S. 2011. Instructional meanings, iconicity, and l’arbitraire du signe in the analysis of the Afrikaans demonstratives. Linguistic theory and empirical evidence, ed. by B. de Jonge & Y. Tobin. Amsterdam/Philadelphia: John Benjamins, pp. 97–137.

Kirsner, Robert S. 2014. Qualitative-quantitative analyses of Dutch and Afrikaans grammar and lexicon. Amsterdam/Philadelphia: John Benjamins.

Kirsner, Robert S. and Thomas J. Hinnebusch. 1980. On the inference of 'inalienable possession' in Swahili. Journal of African Languages and Linguistics 2, 1–16.

Kirsner, Robert S. and Vincent J. van Heuven. 1980. On the opposition between deze (dit) and die (dat) in written Dutch: a discriminant analysis. Linguistics in the Netherlands, ed. by S. Daalder and M. Gerritsen. Amsterdam: North Holland, pp. 101–108.

Kirsner, Robert S. and Vincent J. van Heuven. 1988. The significance of demonstrative position in Modern Dutch. Lingua 76, 265–304.

Kirsner, Robert S. and Vincent J. van Heuven. 1996. Boundary tones and the semantics of the Dutch final particles hè, hoor, zeg and joh. Linguistics in the Netherlands 1996, ed. by C. Cremers and M. den Dikken. Amsterdam/Philadelphia: John Benjamins, pp. 133–146.

Klein-Andreu, Flora. 1980c. A quantitative study of syntactic and pragmatic indications of change in the Spanish of bilinguals in the United States. Locating language in time and space, ed. by W. Labov. New York: Academic Press, pp. 69–82.

Klein-Andreu, Flora. 2000. Grammatical and lexical behavior in the development of the Spanish third-person clitics. Between grammar and lexicon, ed. by Ellen Contini-Morava & Yishai Tobin. Amsterda/Philadelphia: John Benjamins, pp. 159–183.

Enbe, Claudia. 2008. Buenos Aires Spanish prosody: A description of intonation and rhythm in Buenos Aires Spanish speech in normal and pathological populations according to the theory of Phonology as Human Behavior. Master’s essay. Ben-Gurion University of the Negev.